Skip to main content

Monosodium Glutamate vs Formaldehyde (free): which is worse?

Quick answer: Formaldehyde (free) carries the heavier risk profile. Monosodium Glutamate is in the EU and in the US; Formaldehyde (free) is banned in the EU and allowed in the US.

PropertyMonosodium GlutamateFormaldehyde (free)
EU statusBanned
US statusAllowed
Risk levelhigh
Banned inEuropean Union
Restricted inAustralia/New Zealand (required labeling), European Union (required declaration as 'flavor enhancer MSG (E621)')
Categoryadditivecmr
Where it hidesnail hardener, keratin treatment, eyelash glue

What is Monosodium Glutamate?

Monosodium glutamate (MSG) is the sodium salt of glutamic acid, a naturally occurring non-essential amino acid found in many proteins. It is used as a flavor enhancer to intensify umami (savory) taste. MSG was first isolated from seaweed in 1908 by Japanese chemist Kikunae Ikeda and has been used commercially since then.

What is Formaldehyde (free)?

Formaldehyde (free) is free formaldehyde used directly as a preservative and in salon hair treatments.

Documented risks

Monosodium Glutamate: MSG safety has been one of the most extensively debated food additive questions in the past 50 years. The 'Chinese Restaurant Syndrome' — a cluster of symptoms (headache, flushing, sweating, chest tightness) reported after eating Chinese food — was attributed to MSG in a 1968 letter in the New England Journal of Medicine. This set off decades of controversy. Multiple rigorous double-blind, placebo-controlled trials have failed to consistently demonstrate that MSG at doses present in food causes these symptoms when participants do not know whether they received MSG or a placebo. A comprehensive 1993 review by the FDA-commissioned Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) found that while some sensitive individuals may experience symptoms at high doses (>3g of pure MSG on an empty stomach), the doses in typical food servings do not consistently produce symptoms in double-blind conditions. The FDA classifies MSG as GRAS (generally recognized as safe). EFSA's 2017 re-evaluation set an ADI of 30 mg/kg body weight per day, acknowledging that very high doses could affect neurological function but concluding typical dietary exposure is safe. Critics including Dr. Russell Blaylock and advocacy groups have argued that MSG is an 'excitotoxin' — a compound that overstimulates glutamate receptors in the brain and could cause neuronal damage. While glutamate is indeed a neurotransmitter and high-dose glutamate can cause neurotoxicity in animal models, the blood-brain barrier and normal metabolic regulation are generally considered sufficient to prevent dietary MSG from affecting brain glutamate levels. A 2018 EFSA re-evaluation noted that combined exposure to glutamates from all sources (including naturally occurring glutamate in protein-rich foods and other added glutamates E621-E625) could approach the new lower ADI in high consumers — a concern particularly for children with high processed food intake.

Formaldehyde (free): A known human carcinogen (IARC Group 1). Banned from direct use in EU cosmetics; allowed in US products with limited oversight.

Got either one in your pantry?

Scan a barcode and we'll flag both Monosodium Glutamate and Formaldehyde (free) (plus 200+ other ingredients banned overseas).

Scan free →
Sign up free — 5 scans every day →